Zeroing

This article is currently under construction. It may contain little or inaccurate information.

Zeroing refers to calibrating a weapon sight so that the crosshairs meet the expected point of impact of the weapon's projectile at a specific distance. When aiming at a target the same distance away, zero adjustment from the crosshairs is needed.

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Battlefield 4 allows certain weapons to be manually zeroed, allowing the shooter to more reliably hit targets at a distance and to maintain a view centered on the target. A set of predetermined ranges is chosen by pressing Cycle fire rate.[1]

This is a function of all sniper rifles and DMRs, as well as the M82A3 and the AMR-2Battle Pickups. This functionality is in place of the fire selector, and therefore is not available on any select-fire weapon. It is not exclusive to the Recon kit, and works for DMRs in any class.

When a scope is used in conjunction with a Rangefinder the distance away from the recon and where the sniper is pointing is displayed when aiming, thus making zeroing easier instead of having to guess distances. If a rangefinder is not available, distances can be judged by looking at objectives on the map as this tells the use how far away from the objective they are, the same applies to squad members.

The table below shows the predetermined zeroing settings after each press of the cycle fire rate button:

Presses of Cycle Fire Rate

Zeroing Distance (m)

0

100

1

200

2

300

3

400

4

500

5

1000

Certain weapons such as the RPG-7V2 have their iron sights permamently zeroed to a specific range.

After Spring Patch, it is no longer possible to zero a sniper rifle to 0m as the zeroing is pre-set to 100m.

Zeroing in Battlefield 1 functions similarly to that of previous Battlefield games. It is present on all rifles in the Scout class except for the M1903 Experimental as well as the Carbine variants of some rifles, which have their sights fixed to 100m. However, unlike previous iterations, weapons can only be zeroed to 75, 150, and 300 meters.

As in previous games, binoculars or a Trench Periscope can be used in conjunction with zeroing to provide more accurate shooting at longer ranges.